If you are trying to strengthen political parties most just lie, belittle, name call, throw others under the bus, point fingers, blame it on someone else and everything else we are currently seeing the media.
I would prefer to get rid of political parties all together and start hearing what people actually stand for. There are no right or wrong for most things, only different views and opinions shaped by our lives and circumstances we experience. The people of the United States is who needs strengthening. Fighting and blaming need to cease. People need to learn to take responsibility for their actions. People need to feel empowered again and want to make a difference, not just follow along blindly. Most government systems needs a redo. They are old, broken and no longer fit the needs of today. America needs to get back to its roots and I am not speaking of religion. America was made great by trades (farming, steelworkers, oil workers, fishermen, lumber, mechanics, machinist, textile & etc) which we are losing at a fast rate. People need to respect each other and understand you can disagree and remain civil. People need to learn finances and budgets. Things are never free and there is always cost associated with it. I am not sure if I actually answered your question, but I don't think strengthening political parties is going to help anything only hurt more people and families.
Answer:
because many new and advanced technology are invented in this age
The most important legal code of the United States is the U. S. Constitution. One of the characteristics of this code is that its laws apply to all citizens equally, regardless of race, age, class, etc.
This passage shows that Hammurabi's Code did not operate based on the same principle. Babylonian laws were applied differently depending on the class and social status of the perpetrator and the victim.
Answer:
protected
Explanation:
A class can be declared with modifier public.when the class is visible to all classes everywhere and there is no modifier,it can be visible at its own package.